Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Blinken, Kenya’s president huddle

Secretary touts democracy, hails work to end Ethiopia crisis

- MATTHEW LEE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Cara Anna and Samy Magdy of The Associated Press.

NAIROBI — U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken appealed Wednesday for the preservati­on of democracy in politicall­y and ethnically fractured societies as he opened his first official visit to Africa in Kenya amid worsening crises in neighborin­g Ethiopia and Sudan.

In a lengthy, private meeting with Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta and other top officials, Blinken hailed Kenya’s role in seeking to ease the conflict in Ethiopia and as an example of a vibrant, inclusive democracy despite challenges it has faced in its own recent elections.

Kenyatta visited Addis Ababa over the weekend in a bid to bolster an African Union-led mediation initiative to end the violence in Ethiopia that has engulfed the northern Tigray region and spread, prompting widespread fears of a spillover in the conflict.

Blinken spent an hour and a half alone with Kenyatta in a one-on-one session that had been scheduled for only 10 minutes, the State Department said, although the exact topics of the discussion and any potential developmen­ts were not immediatel­y clear.

“We continue to see atrocities being committed, people suffering, and regardless of what we call it, it needs to stop, and there needs to be accountabi­lity,” Blinken later told reporters, adding that he will make a determinat­ion on whether the situation is genocide “once we get all the analysis that goes into looking at the facts.”

Kenyan Cabinet Secretary Raychelle Omamo told reporters that “we believe that a cease-fire is possible” but “in the end, these solutions will come from [the Ethiopian people].”

In earlier comments to Kenyan civic leaders, Blinken spoke about the importance of combatting “democratic recession” around the world, including challenges in the United States that show “just how fragile our democracy can be.”

Kenya faces its own test of stability in a presidenti­al election next year. Blinken is looking to boost thus-far unsuccessf­ul U.S. diplomatic efforts to resolve the deepening conflicts in Ethiopia and in Sudan and to counter growing insurgenci­es elsewhere, like Somalia.

Months of engagement by the administra­tion, including an August visit to Ethiopia by U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t administra­tor Samantha Power and several trips to Addis Ababa, Nairobi and Khartoum by Biden’s special envoy for the Horn of Africa, Jeff Feltman, have produced little progress.

Instead, conflict in Ethiopia has escalated between Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s government and leaders in the northern Tigray region who once dominated the government.

The tensions, which some fear could escalate into mass inter-ethnic killings in Africa’s second-most populated country, exploded into war last year, with thousands killed, many thousands more detained and millions displaced.

“We need to see people detained released,” Blinken told reporters.

Rival Tigray forces are advancing on Addis Ababa, Ethiopia’s capital, amid increasing­ly dire warnings from the U.S. and others for foreigners to leave.

While holding out hope that a window of opportunit­y for a resolution still exists, the Biden administra­tion has moved toward sanctions, announcing the expulsion of Ethiopia from a U.S.-Africa trade pact and hitting leaders and the military of neighborin­g Eritrea with penalties for intervenin­g in the conflict on Ethiopia’s behalf. Sanctions against Ethiopian officials, including Abiy, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, are possible.

Ethiopia has condemned the sanctions and in Addis Ababa, the headquarte­rs of the African Union, and elsewhere, there is skepticism and hostility to U.S. pressure despite America being the country’s largest aid donor.

As Feltman has shuttled between capitals, he and the administra­tion have also been confounded by developmen­ts in Sudan, where a military coup last month toppled a civilian-led government that was making significan­t strides in restoring long-strained ties with the U.S.

Coup leader Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan tightened his grip on power last week, reappointi­ng himself as the chairman of a new Sovereign Council. The U.S. and other Western government­s criticized the move because it did away with a joint military-civilian council already in place. The Sudanese generals responded by saying they would appoint a civilian government in the coming days.

Burhan moved against civilian Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok just hours after Feltman had left Sudan’s capital, Khartoum, on a mission intended to resolve escalating tensions between them.

The U.S. has retaliated for the coup by suspending $700 million in direct financial assistance. Further moves, including a slowdown or reversal of a multiyear rapprochem­ent with the government, could also be in the works.

The top U.S. diplomat for Africa, Molly Phee, met Tuesday with Hamdok and Burhan. Burhan said the leaders of Sudan were willing to engage in dialogue with all political forces without conditions, according to a statement from the newly appointed Sovereign Council.

In addition to trying to cool tensions in the region, Blinken’s trip is also aimed at raising Washington’s profile as a player in regional and internatio­nal initiative­s to restore peace and promote democracy and human rights as it competes with China for influence.

Omamo said Blinken’s visit, along with American contributi­ons to African developmen­t are “important signposts to erect so that the whole world knows that the U.S. is indeed back, is indeed back and interested in the advancemen­t of our continent.”

All the while, China has pumped billions into African energy, infrastruc­ture and other projects that Washington sees as rip-offs designed to take advantage of developing nations. Blinken and Omamo met in a Nairobi hotel in a conference room with an expansive view of an as-yet incomplete, Chinese-financed elevated expressway.

 ?? (AP/Andrew Harnik) ?? Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks Wednesday at a civil society round-table event at the Sankara Hotel in Nairobi, Kenya. More photos at arkansason­line.com/1118blinke­n/.
(AP/Andrew Harnik) Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks Wednesday at a civil society round-table event at the Sankara Hotel in Nairobi, Kenya. More photos at arkansason­line.com/1118blinke­n/.

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